"Out of Mind, Out of Sight" | |
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode | |
Episode no. | Season 1 Episode 11 |
Directed by | Reza Badiyi |
Story by | Joss Whedon |
Teleplay by | Ashley Gable Thomas A. Swyden |
Production code | 4V11 |
Original air date | May 19, 1997 |
Guest appearance(s) | |
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"Out of Mind, Out of Sight"[1] is the eleventh episode of the first season of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The episode aired on The WB on May 19, 1997. In the episode, an invisible force is attacking people at the local school and Cordelia may be in danger. The relationship between Buffy and Cordelia grows closer. The title of the episode is a play on the proverb.
Plot[]
After her English class, Cordelia arranges to meet with the teacher the next day to talk about her paper. In the boys' locker room, Cordelia's boyfriend is attacked by an invisible assailant with a baseball bat and taken to hospital. Buffy enters the boys' locker room and finds the word "LOOK" spray-painted on the lockers. As Buffy approaches her, Harmony is pushed down the stairs by an invisible force and injures her ankle. The invisible thing bumps into Buffy before escaping.
As the Scooby Gang disperse, Buffy follows the sound of a flute. Looking over Willow's list of missing children, Buffy suspects Marcie when she sees she played the flute. Buffy finds Marcie's hideout. While Buffy is looking at Marcie's yearbook, Marcie—who is invisible—is standing behind her with a knife. Marcie then finds Mrs. Miller, Cordelia's English teacher, and suffocates her with a plastic bag. Cordelia arrives a short while afterwards and saves Mrs. Miller. An invisible hand writes "LISTEN" on the blackboard.
In a flashback, Marcie is sitting in her literature class as she attempts to answer a question posed by the teacher and is looked over in favor of her classmates, even though she had her hand up. Her hand then starts to fade away. Giles realizes that Marcie did not willingly become invisible, but was made invisible due to people never noticing her existence. As the Scoobies think back to Harmony and Mitch, and flick through Marcie's yearbook, they find Cordelia's picture, horribly defaced. They realize that Marcie is after Cordelia, whom she resented for constantly being the center of attention; suddenly the latter walks into the library asking Buffy for protection. They explain to Cordelia who is following her and decide to use her as bait and to have Buffy bodyguard her.
Using recorded flute music, Marcie lures Willow, Xander and Giles into the boiler room where she closes the door and opens the gas, then grabs Cordelia as she is changing. Buffy follows Cordelia and finds her unconscious. Marcie injects Buffy with a sedative and renders her unconscious
Buffy and Cordelia wake up; they are tied to some chairs. They see the word "LEARN" written on a curtain, and Marcie says that Cordelia is the lesson—or will be after Marcie surgically disfigures her face. Buffy kicks the instrument tray at Marcie and frees herself from the ropes. In the boiler room, Angel rescues the Scooby Gang and closes the gas valve. Buffy realizes that she must use her other senses to fight an invisible enemy; she concentrates, listening to Marcie, and knocks her into a curtain before knocking her out. After Buffy frees Cordelia, two mysterious FBI agents arrive to haul Marcie away.
Marcie is taken by the FBI to a school of invisible students. She sits down in class and opens her textbook to a chapter entitled Assassination and Infiltration, of which she approves.
Cultural references[]
Buffy says, "All I know is, it's a message. And monsters don't usually send messages. It's pretty much crush, kill, destroy."[2] The line "Crush! Kill! Destroy!" became famous after occurring in the episode "Revolt of the Androids" of the TV show Lost in Space, in which the same line is said by a super-android.[3]
The teacher and Cordelia in her English class discuss William Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice. Cordelia says about Shylock, "That is such a Twinkie defense. Shylock should get over himself."[4] Season 5's episode "Tough Love" also mentions the Twinkie defense.
Continuity[]
Angel meets Giles for the first time and says he can bring him the Pergamum Codex[1], a key account of Slayer lore that will be pivotal in "Prophecy Girl." Angel is able to save the Scoobies from the boiler room because he was bringing the book to Giles. (In "Orpheus," the Season 4 episode 15 of Angel, Winifred Burkle asks Willow about the Codex.)
Willow wears a white Scooby-Doo t-shirt in this episode. In the Season 2 pilot, "When She Was Bad," Xander wears a red Scooby Doo shirt. In "Beauty and the Beasts" Willow will keep her forensic tools in a Scooby Doo lunch box. Xander calls Buffy's group of friends the "Scooby Gang" for the first time in "What's My Line?"
Broadcast and reception[]
"Out of Mind, Out of Sight" was first broadcast on The WB. It received a Nielsen rating of 2.3 on its initial airing.[5]
Vox ranked it at #80 on their "Every Episode Ranked From Worst to Best" list of all 144 episodes (to mark the 20th anniversary of the show), writing, "One of the earliest examples of Buffy making someone’s figurative demons literal, this episode makes a neglected girl disappear, leaving her to wreak havoc on the school at will. It’s on the nose but, thanks to some canny voiceover work from Clea Duvall as the invisible girl, surprisingly affecting in the end."[6]
Noel Murray of The A.V. Club rated the episode B, writing that it "comes awfully close to being a classic, but can't quite overcome ... some erratic performances and a plot that's more busy than necessary". He praised the more subtle scenes but said that it was "a little too blunt about its metaphor".[7] DVD Talk's Phillip Duncan called "Out of Mind, Out of Sight" "[a]n ingenious combination of monster and social commentary [that] make this another standout episode".[8] A review from the BBC was also positive, describing it as a "clever script" with "a carefully polished plot".[9]
Notes[]
- 1.^ Giles: "I've studied all the extant volumes, of course. But the most salient books of Slayer prophecy have been lost. The Tiberius Manifesto, the Pergamum Codex..." Angel: "The Codex?" Giles: "It's reputed to have contained the most complete prophecies about the Slayer's role in the end years. Unfortunately, the book was lost in the 15th century." Angel: "Not lost. Misplaced. I can get it."[10]
References[]
- ↑ BBC episode guide
- ↑ "Xander: Scoobies get homework now?". BtVS and ATS Dialogue. Buffyverse DB. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
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: - ↑ "Lost in Space". The Buffy and Angel Trivia Guide. Restless BtVS. 13 October 2004. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
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: - ↑ "01x11 - Out of Mind, Out of Sight". Buffy the Vampire Slayer Transcripts. Forever Dreaming. May 22, 1997. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
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: - ↑ "Nielsen Ratings for Buffy's First Season". Archived from the original on 23 August 2006. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
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: - ↑ Framke, Caroline (March 10, 2017). "In honor of Buffy's 20th anniversary, we ranked it from worst to best episode". Vox. Retrieved January 4, 2024.
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: - ↑ Murray, Noel (26 June 2008). ""Nightmares", etc". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
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: - ↑ Duncan, Phillip (21 January 2002). "Buffy the Vampire Slayer — Season 1". DVD Talk. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
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: - ↑ "Out of Mind, Out of Sight: Review". BBC. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
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: - ↑ "01x11 - Out of Mind, Out of Sight". Buffy the Vampire Slayer Transcripts. Forever Dreaming. May 22, 1997. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
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External links[]
Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes | ||
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Season 1 | "Welcome to the Hellmouth" • "The Harvest" • "Witch" • "Teacher's Pet" • "Never Kill a Boy on the First Date" • "The Pack" • "Angel" • "I, Robot... You, Jane" • "The Puppet Show" • "Nightmares" • "Out of Mind, Out of Sight" • "Prophecy Girl" | |
Season 2 | "When She Was Bad" • "Some Assembly Required" • "School Hard" • "Inca Mummy Girl" • "Reptile Boy" • "Halloween" • "Lie to Me" • "The Dark Age" • "What's My Line, Parts One and Two" • "Ted" • "Bad Eggs" • "Surprise" • "Innocence" • "Phases" • "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" • "Passion" • "Killed by Death" • "I Only Have Eyes for You" • "Go Fish" • "Becoming, Parts One and Two" | |
Season 3 | "Anne" • "Dead Man's Party" • "Faith, Hope & Trick" • "Beauty and the Beasts" • "Homecoming" • "Band Candy" • "Revelations" • "Lovers Walk" • "The Wish" • "Amends" • "Gingerbread" • "Helpless" • "The Zeppo" • "Bad Girls" • "Consequences" • "Doppelgangland" • "Enemies" • "Earshot" • "Choices" • "The Prom" • "Graduation Day, Parts One and Two" | |
Season 4 | "The Freshman" • "Living Conditions" • "The Harsh Light of Day" • "Fear, Itself" • "Beer Bad" • "Wild at Heart" • "The Initiative" • "Pangs" • "Something Blue" • "Hush" • "Doomed" • "A New Man" • "The I in Team" • "Goodbye Iowa" • "This Year's Girl" • "Who Are You" • "Superstar" • "Where the Wild Things Are" • "New Moon Rising" • "The Yoko Factor" • "Primeval" • "Restless" | |
Season 5 | "Buffy vs. Dracula" • "Real Me" • "The Replacement" • "Out of My Mind" • "No Place Like Home" • "Family" • "Fool for Love" • "Shadow" • "Listening to Fear" • "Into the Woods" • "Triangle" • "Checkpoint" • "Blood Ties" • "Crush" • "I Was Made to Love You" • "The Body" • "Forever" • "Intervention" • "Tough Love" • "Spiral" • "The Weight of the World" • "The Gift" | |
Season 6 | "Bargaining, Parts One and Two" • "After Life" • "Flooded" • "Life Serial" • "All the Way" • "Once More, with Feeling" • "Tabula Rasa" • "Smashed" • "Wrecked" • "Gone" • "Doublemeat Palace" • "Dead Things" • "Older and Far Away" • "As You Were" • "Hell's Bells" • "Normal Again" • "Entropy" • "Seeing Red" • "Villains" • "Two to Go" • "Grave" | |
Season 7 | "Lessons" • "Beneath You" • "Same Time, Same Place" • "Help" • "Selfless" • "Him" • "Conversations with Dead People" • "Sleeper" • "Never Leave Me" • "Bring on the Night" • "Showtime" • "Potential" • "The Killer in Me" • "First Date" • "Get It Done" • "Storyteller" • "Lies My Parents Told Me" • "Dirty Girls" • "Empty Places" • "Touched" • "End of Days" • "Chosen" |
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